Just Write

Don’t think. Don’t plan. Just Write.

When you write, using the method of writing freely – called a freewrite – you can lose control with no worries about consequences.  Writing in this style is for your personal enjoyment or to enhance your writing.  This isn’t your final piece to be published.  No one else has to read your writing, unless you invite them to. When you freewrite, don’t think and don’t plan what you will write next. Just go with the moment’s energy. If you use a prompt that draws from your childhood, you will have endless material to write about.

Just Write

How to get in the mood to write.

Get comfortable in your chair, couch, or wherever you are sitting . Both feet flat on the floor. Wiggle, squirm, move around until you are sitting comfortably.  Take a deep breath in through your nose and release slowly through your mouth. Feel the floor under your feet. Your chair is firmly supporting you. Rest your hands comfortably in your lap, or on your thighs or on the table. Sit back and relax into your chair, feeling completely supported and totally comfortable. Take a deep breath in, hold and let go. Let go of your worries, Let go of your concerns. Take a nice deep breath in. Feel the breath go down, past your lungs, into your belly. Hold and really whoosh out. As you go through this relaxation, take deep breaths as you need to and really whoosh out as you exhale. Perhaps wiggle your toes and feet, rotate your…

Prompts

Writing and Improv – Prompt #14

Today’s prompt inspired by Leigh Anne Jasheway, “Improv/e your writing” in the Nov/Dec issue of Writer’s Digest magazine. Talking about writing and improv: “Write a short description of something physical a person would do — say Stanley tapped his foot while making occasional clicking sounds with his tongue.” Your turn:  Conjure a character, an action and go from there. . . don’t worry about where your writing will take you, be open to where this can go. Prompt:  Character and action

Prompts

Remember when you . . . Prompt #10

The current issue of  Writer’s Digest magazine (Nov/Dec 2013) is filled with inspirational prompt ideas. Here’s one,  “Start with the statement ‘Remember when you . . . ‘ and dream up something unusual to fill in the blank.” Or, you can write about something that really happened. Prompt:  Remember when you . . .

Quotes

Dream it through with Andre Dubus III

“Dream, dream, dream it through. Write more with your body and less with your head. Don’t think a story through, don’t think it out. The danger in thinking it through is that most of us are not smart enough to do it that way. We have to go one moment at a time.” – Andre Dubus III, in the November 2013 issue of The Writer magazine.